Difference between revisions of "Ester d'Engaddi (1821 Pellico), play"

From 4 Enoch: : The Online Encyclopedia of Second Temple Judaism, and Christian and Islamic Origins
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 64: Line 64:
[[Category:Second Temple Studies--Fiction|1821 Pellico]]
[[Category:Second Temple Studies--Fiction|1821 Pellico]]
[[Category:Second Temple Studies--Italian|1821 Pellico]]
[[Category:Second Temple Studies--Italian|1821 Pellico]]
[[Category:Christian Origins Studies--1800s|1821 Pellico]]
[[Category:Christian Origins Studies--Fiction|1821 Pellico]]
[[Category:Christian Origins Studies--Italian|1821 Pellico]]





Revision as of 09:31, 20 April 2015

Ester d'Engaddi <Italian> / Esther of Engaddi (1821) is a play by Silvio Pellico.

Abstract

A tragedy in five acts by the Italian patriot and writer. The setting is a remote area of Israel where a group of Jewish refugees lives, around 50 years after the destruction of the Temple.

Pellico reverses his present-day's situation; the Christians are the oppressed minority, while the Jews are the majority, ruled by a corrupted High Priest.

The heroine Ester is a Jewess. She is the faithful wife of Azaria, the champion of the Jews in their resistance against the Romans, while her father Eleazaro has been banned as he converted to Christianity.

The tragedy focuses on the plot of the High Priest who slanders and eventually poisons Ester for having rejected his love, while the faithful Ester steadily maintains her loyalty to both her father and husband.

Ester reproaches his father for despising the Jews:

"Agl’idoli empi / non immolar, dritto e’ ma qui mentito / Dio non s’ adora: e (qual pur fosse il Giusto, / che in Golgota moria) de’ giusti il rege / altro esser può che di Giacobbe il Dio?"

With similar world she reproaches the Jews for despising her father:

"Rispettate i suoi giorni; altra è sua legge, / altre le preci ma sol uno è il Dio!"

Ester dies but not before the entire people reconcile with Eleazaro and call him: "Fratello nostro (our brother)."

Nobody converts. Through the sacrifice of Ester, Christians and Jews learn how to live together as siblings.

  • Gabriele Boccaccini, University of Michigan

Editions, performances

Premiered in Turin, Italy: 1838.

Translations

Adaptations

External links